The 4K video was shot using six Go Pro cameras mounted using a Freedom 360 camera rig. All of the footage was processed using an Intel Core i7-powered computer with Intel Iris graphics. The clips were then stitched together using the Kolor Autopano Video Pro software.

The release comes following the arrival of the first 360-degree videos earlier this month. The scheme will eventually boost the content available to those rocking virtual reality headsets like the Oculus Rift or those built using Google Cardboard.

Google wrote: “You could let viewers see the stage and

the crowd of your concert, the sky and the ground as you wingsuit glide,

or you could even have a choose-your-own-adventure video where people

see a different story depending on where they look. Only you know what’s

possible.”

If you’re using Chrome to read this story, you can watch the clip below:

The social network plans to integrate ‘spherical videos’ into Facebook News Feeds as well as making them available on the Oculus Rift headset. Facebook previewed its initiative with a tour of its Menlo Park HQ shot using 24 cameras.